Alexander Klöpping, founder of Blendle. Blendle It's hard to imagine droves of people paying for online journalism in a world in which you can get almost any media — whether a news article or a full-length feature film — free.

But Blendle thinks it has a solution and the evidence both that it can work and that people will part with their cash to access newspaper websites.

Blendle is based in the Netherlands. Its website and app lets readers make micropayments for individual articles from major publishers, rather than having to commit to monthly or annual subscriptions. Users register for Blendle and put in their credit-card details just once at the beginning of the process in which they create a newsfeed of stories about the topics in which they are interested. When they click on a headline, the app/website takes a small payment. And — perhaps the most intriguing part of the whole offer — if readers don't like an article, they can get an instant refund if they provide feedback.

Speaking at the Digital Media Strategies conference in London on Tuesday, Blendle founder Alexander Klöpping told the audience that Blendle had persuaded all the major national newspapers in the Netherlands to come on board.

Blendle now has 200,000 users in the region (the Netherlands has a population of about 16.8 million). He said about 20% of those convert to paying users.

Klöpping added: "It's a small country, but it shows what can happen if you make a nice product. We tried to make a really nice product; that's what we like to do. We put all the newspapers and magazines from one country into one system and got young people starting to pay for journalism ... [and start getting them] in the habit of paying, like they do for music and films nowadays.

"I don't know anyone my age that has paid a single euro in his life for journalism," added Klöpping, who is 28, "but we are seeing people are paying."

Klöpping said on average only 5% of articles that are read receive refund requests. And he also revealed the type of article that sees enormous numbers of refunds: clickbait.

"We see excruciatingly high refunds for gossip magazines, which are basically clickbait on print," he said. "Users are making an honest decision by paying, and if it doesn't deliver, they ask for their money back. The system sees how often people ask for their money back. It's a heavy decision for a user and a data point not a lot of publishers would usually get — you'd skip a story or go back — but even worse than people flagging as inappropriate is actually asking for your fricking money back! In a newsroom that could mean a lot."

The Blendle iPad app. Blendle

It may well be that Blendle has been so successful in the Netherlands because the publications that have signed up have been Dutch language, rather than English, in which articles are often replicated hundreds of times over. But Klöpping believes the Netherlands is no different than any other country, and he hinted that he may be looking to France or Germany next (though the company has a rule that it will officially launch in a country only when two-thirds of the region's publications have signed up).

Klöpping said: "I believe the type of user we have, they are in any other country. They are there, it's just a matter of how good is your product, how easy it is to pay for stuff. Every time I go to a website, only to bounce off to a registration screen — we need to solve that. I don't care if that's me, or someone else. If journalism is free, maybe Facebook can do that. Or a wallet system. Everyone can kill me definitely, it's very, very scary."

He later continued: "I've spoken to so many publishers and I get depressed when everyone is copying The New York Times and the Financial Times [in their paywall strategy]. This is true for every local newspaper in Holland, every national newspaper in Germany, the fact that there's so little experimentation: That's a little bit depressing for me."

We caught up with Romanus Otte, general manager of WELT Digital (part of the Axel Springer group), after the conference and asked what was so appealing about Blendle that led to the investment. Otte said the group was among the first publishers in Germany to trial online paywalls, and while it might be difficult to get a consortium of German publishers to sign up for a micropayment-type offer, Blendle will allow Axel Springer insights as to why people choose to pay for journalism online.

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